Part 48 (1/2)

Kitty is a good fellow.

”Why, cert.,” she said when I begged her last Wednesday to take care of Helen. ”Married! Did you say married? Oh, Cadge, quit pegging shoes!”

Jumping up from the drawing table, Kitty left streams of India ink making her beastesses all tigers while she called to Miss Bryant, who was pounding viciously upon a typewriter:--

”Cadge, did you hear? Cadge! The Princess is going to be married. 'Course you remember, Mr. Burke, Cadge is going to be married herself Sat.u.r.day.”

”Don't be too sure of it,” returned Miss Bryant, ”and do let me finish this sentence. Ten to one Pros. or I'll be grabbed off for an a.s.signment Sat.u.r.day evening 'fore we can be married. But the Princess is different; she has leisure. Burke, shake!”

She sprang up to take my hand, her eyes s.h.i.+ning with excitement.

Kitty hurried with me to the Nicaragua, where she pounced upon Helen, her red curls madly bobbing.

”What a bride you'll make!” she cried fondly. ”Going to be married from the den, aren't you? Oh, I'm up to my eyes in weddings; Cadge simply won't attend to anything. But what have you been doing to yourself? Come here, Helen.”

She pushed the proud, pale beauty into a chair, smothering her with kisses and the piles of cus.h.i.+ons that seem to add bliss to women's joys and soften all their griefs.

”Tired, aren't you?” she purred. ”Needed me. Now just you sit and talk with Mr. Burke and I'll pack up your brittle-brae in three no-times.

Clesta,--where's that imp?”

She called to the little combination maid and model who had accompanied us.

”Clesta's afraid of you, Helen. 'Why'd ye fetch me 'long?' she whimpers.

'Miss Kitty, why'd ye fetch me 'long?' Huh, I 'member how you used to have his picture with yours in a white and gold frame!”

Helen scarcely replied to Kitty's raptures. She laid her head back half- protestingly among her cus.h.i.+ons, showing her long, exquisite throat. For an instant she let her shadowy lashes droop over the everchanging l.u.s.tre of her eyes. I couldn't help thinking of a great, glorious bird of heaven resting with broken wing.

”Poor little Princess!” said Kitty, who hardly comes to Helen's shoulder.

Then we all laughed.

Kitty stayed at the Nicaragua that night, and when I came Thursday afternoon she stopped me outside the door, to say:--

”I wouldn't let Helen talk too much; she's nervous.”

”Can you tell me what is the matter with her?” I asked. ”I don't think she's well.”

”Oh, nothing. You know--she's been worrying.” Then loyal Kitty spoke purposely of commonplaces. ”General must have danced her off her feet.

Darmstetter's death upset her terribly, too. She never will speak of it.

But she'll be as right as right with me. Bring her 'round as soon as the man comes for the trunks. You've only to head up a barrel of dishes, quick, 'fore Clesta gets in any fine work smas.h.i.+ng 'em.”

As I pa.s.sed through the hall, littered with trunks and packing cases, to the dismantled parlour, Helen looked up from a ma.s.s of old letters and dance cards.

”I'm sorting my--souvenirs,” she said.

The face she lifted was white, only the lips richly red, with a shade of fatigue under the haunting eyes. The graceful figure in its close-fitting dress looked a trifle less round than it had done earlier in the winter, and one fair arm, as it escaped from its flowing sleeve, was almost thin.

”Dear,” I said wistfully, for something in her drooping att.i.tude smote me to remorse and inspired me with tenderness; ”will you really trust your life to me?”